
Labour quietly paves way for £174k civil servant salaries
Under new civil service guidance issued by the Treasury, only earnings above £174,000 and bonuses more than £25,000 must be signed off, a rise from £150,000 and £17,500 respectively.
The change will affect 260 civil servants who earn between £150,000 and £200,000 a year and 30 mandarins who earn more than £200,000. A further 2,915 staff earn more than £100,000 a year.
William Yarwood, of the TaxPayers' Alliance campaign group, told The Telegraph: 'Taxpayers will be outraged that top civil servants are being handed even more generous pay raises with less oversight.
'This quiet rule change opens the floodgates to inflated salaries behind closed doors at a time when Whitehall should be making cuts.
'With the public sector already bloated and unaccountable, ministers must slam the brakes on these cosy pay arrangements and start defending the interests of taxpayers.'
Pay control measures were introduced by the last Conservative government in an attempt to manage the public sector wage bill. However, the final years of the Tory government saw the size of the Civil Service balloon.
The number of civil servants has increased by 21pc in the past five years, with the wage bill up by a quarter. The median salary increased by 25pc from £27,080 in 2019 to £33,980 in 2024.
The Treasury defended increasing the threshold by £24,000 – equivalent to 16pc – arguing the £150,000 cap had been frozen since 2017.
Impact on taxpayers
However, that may prove little comfort to taxpayers. Income tax and National Insurance thresholds have remained frozen since 2021-22 with Sir Keir Starmer refusing last week to rule out extending the stealth raid until 2029-30.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves used her maiden Budget last year to extend a freeze on inheritance tax thresholds until 2029-30, a threshold that has stayed the same since 2009.
Conservative MP, Richard Holden, criticised increasing the Civil Service threshold, describing it as a 'grubby deal'.
The shadow paymaster general told the Mail on Sunday: 'The state is far too bloated.
'They are a party in hock to public sector pay, and trying to sneak out bumper pay deals for mandarins and quangocrats by the back door shows they don't have the national interest at heart.
'A grubby deal for their public sector chums achieves nothing.'
A Treasury spokesman said: 'The previous threshold for senior civil servants' salaries was set in 2017, and since then, average pay across the private and public sector has risen.
'The new, below-inflation, threshold rise would apply to a minority of senior civil servants and would be subject to rigorous scrutiny.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
16 minutes ago
- The Independent
Bryson DeChambeau tips Trump's Turnberry as ‘worthy' host of The Open
Bryson DeChambeau has tipped President Donald Trump 's Turnberry golf course to host The Open in the future and end its inactive role on the R&A's 10-venue British Open rotation. The Scottish golf course has not hosted the prestigious event for 16 years, with its last iteration back in 2009. And DeChambeau, who shot a stunning six-under-par round of 65 at Royal Portrush to make the cut and sit +1 for the major overall at the half-way stage, has backed Trump's course to prove a worthy host once more. 'I look at it as a golf course,' said DeChambeau, whose round of golf with the president has amassed more than 15 million views on YouTube. 'It's one of the best golf courses in the world, and I'd love for it to be a part of the rotation. 'Albeit I haven't played it, I've heard so many great things about it, and anytime you get to play a special historical golf course like that, I think it's worthy of it, for sure.' The Ayrshire course last saw 59-year-old Tom Watson make a bogey on the 72nd hole with Stewart Cink prevailing in a playoff. Speaking ahead of the Open being played this week at Royal Portrush, R&A chief executive Mark Darbon said transportation and other issues had to be addressed before Turnberry got its hands on the oldest major championship again. Darbon said the R&A met with Eric Trump and other leaders of Trump Golf a few months ago regarding the 'big logistical challenges' facing Turnberry, and that the talks had been constructive. DeChambeau believes Trump would make Turnberry a special Open venue. 'He'd still probably respect the R&A and what they're trying to accomplish,' DeChambeau said. 'I can't speak on his behalf, but what I can say is knowing him, he'll do his best of a job as he possibly can.' DeChambeau's relationship with Trump is such that he joined him on stage at an election party in Florida in November before Trump was declared president again. DeChambeau also had a round of golf with Trump and some short-game practice on the South Lawn of the White House a few months ago. So what of his audience with Trump around this time last year, when they attempted to break 50 off the forward tees at the president's Bedminster Golf Club in New Jersey using the scramble format? It went on YouTube and was a huge success. 'Got like 15 million views or something,' DeChambeau said. 'It was fun.' DeChambeau was speaking after shooting 6-under 65 in the second round of the Open at Royal Portrush in a bid to make the cut, having opened with a 78. AP contributed to this report


Telegraph
17 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Bryson DeChambeau calls for Donald Trump's Turnberry to host the Open
Donald Trump ally Bryson DeChambeau has urged the R&A to finally grant the US president's long-held wish to host an Open at Turnberry. After a resurgent round at Royal Portrush on Friday, DeChambeau enthusiastically backed Trump's Scottish course even though he has yet to play it. 'I think it's worthy of it for sure,' said DeChambeau after organisers revealed earlier this week that discussions had taken place with the president's son Eric Trump. The relatively low income the venue earns as well as infrastructure concerns are hurdles alongside specific considerations relating to the president. Telegraph Sport reported earlier this week how Trump's prominent behaviour at the Club World Cup – where he shared a stage for the Chelsea trophy lift – also privately reinforces a determination for the R&A to 'stay out of politics'. However, LIV golfer DeChambeau, who has Trump's phone number and broadcasted a round with the president on his YouTube channel, sees no reason why it should not be considered for the next available Open slot in 2028. 'I look at it as a golf course,' said DeChambeau. 'It's one of the best golf courses in the world, and I'd love for it to be a part of the rotation. I haven't played it but I've heard so many great things about it and any time you get to play a special historical golf course like that.' When asked whether Trump would try to have a 'special' impact on the Open, he added: 'He'd still probably respect the R&A and what they're trying to accomplish. I can't speak on his behalf, but what I can say is knowing him, he'll do his best of a job as he possibly can, and I know they won't let him down.' DeChambeau was in chipper mood after battling back impressively from a horror round of 78 on Thursday. Explaining how he drew on his father's mantra of never giving up, he hit some of his best form with a six-under par 65 on Friday. He found seven birdies and one bogey to sit one-over, yet he said there were no major changes in his approach. 'I've played the same as I did yesterday. That's links golf for you,' he said. DeChambeau, famous for his left-field club tinkering, revealed that he had been practising with a new ball that he feels could help with his control, but said it was too soon to put it into action. 'It's coming; it'll be here, worst case scenario September, but an iteration of it in the next couple weeks,' he addd. 'I need a golf ball that on wedges can click on the face more consistently. I get a lot of slipping on the face just because of how vertical I am and how much loft I have ... so getting something that comes off at a more consistent trajectory in adverse conditions is really the goal.' Another buoyant American as the rain poured again on Friday was Harris English, who maintained sparkling form to end the day five under. He said he had been exchanging messages throughout with caddie Eric Larson, who had been denied entry to the UK over a drug conviction more than 30 years ago. Larson served 10 years in prison for drug offences before he was released in 2006 - and he has caddied at the Open before. But he now needs an exemption to the new Electronic Travel Authority visa rules in the UK. 'I miss having him out here - disappointed he's not here, but I know he's rooting me on from Palm Beach Gardens,' said English. 'He's probably one of the most positive people I've ever been around. He's obviously been in a pretty rough spot for 10-plus years, so every day is a gift. He does not have a bad day. So that's what I love about him.'


The Guardian
17 minutes ago
- The Guardian
From NHS to Send: the key areas Labour wants to improve before next election
Angela Rayner has called on Labour colleagues to 'step up and make that case' for the government's achievements, saying it was important to stress policies were not about short-term fixes but 'fundamental reforms'. Here are four areas where Labour is seeking to improve society – but faces a race against time before the next election to do so. This is in one sense an area where the government can claim quick-ish gains, with the boast that an additional 2m appointments have been created since the election, and promises to cut waiting times, a promise which hangs in the balance. But at the same time, more fundamental change is needed to cope with an ageing population more prone to chronic conditions. Hence the NHS 10-year plan, set out earlier this month and intended to move the health service to a different model, one based less on acute hospital care and more on community hubs. Then there is the parallel process to find a working model for older people's social care. As with health, this combines the very immediate and the hugely knotty and long term. In the foreground is the political wreckage of the government's attempt to shave £5bn off the annual welfare bill, primarily by tightening rules for personal independence payment, an idea dropped amid a massive Labour rebellion. The context to that, of course, is the significant increase in the numbers of people receiving benefits for long-term sickness and disability, an area where the experts are not even clear precisely what is causing it, let alone how to alleviate it. This is likely to be a challenge for several governments to come. A subject just as pressing and controversial as welfare, and also one where there are no easy solutions on offer. Ministers have pledged a thorough examination of the current system, which is both increasingly expensive and the cause of much complaint and anguish for parents and children seeking to navigate it. While ministers have guaranteed the continuation of some sort of statutory provision for Send pupils, this will not necessarily be via the current method of education, health and care plans, or EHCPs, despite the worries of campaigners. After the welfare debacle, expect much caution. As is a common political truism, the things run by councils – bin collections, libraries, social care – are often the ones that voters notice most immediately. And it's fair to say that in many cases, the impressions are not good. Labour has already embarked on a shake-up of local government, combining a series of smaller councils and creating more mayoralties. This may simplify some things, but a much deeper malaise is the lack of money for local government, not helped by the reliance on a council tax system based on valuations last done in 1993. This is probably too big an ask for now, but at some point a government will have to get to grips with it.